LONG BEACH - Former NFL player and real estate investor Damon Dunn has collected more than $200,000 for his campaign to be mayor -- mostly from himself.Dunn raised $241,432 from Jan. 1 to June 30, according to a campaign finance statement filed in the City Clerk's office on the July 31 semi-annual deadline.Dunn was his own biggest contributor; the co-founder of Irvine-based Tricor Southwest Corp. gave his own campaign $125,000 in the reporting period.Even without the self-boost, Dunn's efforts were good enough to blow past the budding field for mayor, a race that has become wide open since Mayor Bob Foster announced July 16 that he would not seek a third term.The position is one of nine local elected offices voters will choose in the April 8 municipal primary. The five odd-numbered City Council seats are also part of the slate, along with the city attorney, city prosecutor and city auditor.Behind Dunn are Long Beach City College Trustee Doug Otto, who reported raising $70,158; Councilwoman Gerrie Schipske, with $24,430; and Jana Shields, a past 1st Council District candidate and treasurer of the Willmore City Heritage Association, with $3,320.Vice Mayor Robert Garcia and Councilwoman Suja Lowenthal both declared for the mayoral race after Foster made his announcement, following the reporting deadline.There was a smattering of other campaign finance filings. Candidates raising and spending more than $1,000 are required to file a disclosure form.The downtown 1st District will get a new representative next year since Garcia, who is eligible for a second term, is running for mayor instead.Community organizer Jason Aula has filed intent papers to run for the seat and submitted a report showing he had raised nothing this year.Two candidates, Ricardo Linarez and Lena Gonzalez, started campaigns for the 1st in the second half of July. Linarez, a Marine Corps veteran who ran for a Long Beach Unified School District Board of Education seat in 2012, is a field deputy for 9th District Councilman Steve Neal; Gonzalez is a field deputy for Garcia and a West Gateway resident.In the 3rd District, comprised of Belmont Shore, Belmont Heights, University Park Estates and Naples, educator Martha Flores-Gibson, who has run for state Assembly and Senate, is part of a field that now includes only political consultant Daniel Haro.Flores-Gibson raised $5,100, including a $3,800 loan from herself. Haro did not file a report.The East Long Beach 5th District now represented by Schipske will also get a new council member next year. Businessman Joe Luyben, Los Angeles County budget officer Stacy Mungo and lobbyist Carl Kemp have all filed to run.Records did not show that Luyben filed a report. Mungo collected $14,671, with a $1,000 self loan.Incumbent Councilman James Johnson will seek re-election in the West Long Beach 7th District and disclosed raising $71,297. Challenger Larry King, a businessman, has contributed $1,000 to his own campaign. He has not received any other money.Only Neal has filed in the 9th District, but he is running for the 64th Assembly District and has said he would not seek both seats.Eric Bradley can be reached at 562-499-1254eric.bradley@presstelegram.com@EricBradleyPT on Twitter